The internet has developed a systemic racism problem where algorithms prioritize engagement over content safety, allowing racist content to proliferate through loopholes and enabling creators to build careers from hate speech while gaslighting victims; this represents a shift from earlier 'cancel culture' to a more nuanced 'racism 2.0' where perpetrators claim they are preserving history rather than spreading hate, and platforms continue to allow such content despite its harmful effects on marginalized communities.
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the internet has a racism problem...Added:
Black people are not nearly as oppressed as they say they are. But when something doesn't go their way, watch how quick they are to pull the victim card. Like, "Oh, I didn't get the job because I'm black. I have to work twice as hard as a white person." Maybe you didn't get the job because you're unprofessional and you talk and dress black.
>> Did a white man ever tell you that?
>> You know what? I'm just going to say it.
The internet has a racism problem.
Algorithms are actively promoting racist content. And through various loopholes, racist and disturbing content has been allowed to just fester on the platforms that we use every day. But dare I say, it literally wasn't always like this. In 2013, as PR executive Justine Sako took the grueling 14-hour flight from London to Cape Town, she tweeted the following.
Going to Africa. Hope I don't get AIDS.
Just kidding. I'm white. I don't even really need to go over how racist, insane, and insensitive this tweet is. I mean, making an illness that killed millions of people across the world a gag insinuating that an entire continent is a hotbed for a disease that is literally present basically everywhere on Earth. And that last just kidding, I'm white, was just the cherry on top of this absolutely horrendous and racist tweet. And to say the least, the internet was pissed. How's Justine Landed began to trend?
all over the world scoured the internet to find her information, finding things like her address, contacting her employer, etc. To say the least, before the plane's wheels hit the ground in South Africa, Sako's career was over.
She was fired from her cushy PR executive job, almost disowned by her own family, and quickly made into a social pariah. I think this is a really good example of kind of the carceral cancel culture state that existed on the internet for quite a long time. But as we've seen today, that has changed. Over 10 years later, a man by the name of Ragtime Rev would literally go viral on YouTube for content like this.
>> There's not even words for me on this because I feel like it's crazy that the platform that punishes content for talking too much about topics like sexual assault allowed this white man not only to say the n-word, but use it in his thumbnail, his title, multiple titles. And this wasn't just one video.
He's saying a song that literally sounds handmade for a menstrual show. And yet, there is absolutely nothing the platform could do. It has to allow this type of content on its platform. And this is just a symptom of a bigger problem. Like I said, racism has gotten awful online.
People are making entire careers by just being a racist person. Viral Tik Tok yappers are literally just repeating racist talking points and gaslighting black people when they're called out on it. There's all this talk about so-called black fatigue, and AI is being used to propagate the same old stereotypes that have been used to demean and degrade black people for years. So, to say the least, we do have a lot to talk about today. And I did want to say, please don't mind me if it seems like I'm a little extra jokey today, extra light today. This topic is not funny to me. I just have to find a little bit of humor in it, or else I literally feel like I'm going to lose my mind because it's insanely depressing when I think too deeply about how ingrained racism is into our society. a racist claim to fame. Let's talk about how many people have literally been building entire careers from being horribly racist online. Starting with today's first goober, who we mentioned earlier in the intro, Ragtime Rev. Now, at first glance, you might think that Ragtime Rev is your average music YouTuber. You know, making covers, releasing his own takes on songs that he loves. Well, then you look a little bit further and you see these absolute gems like I'm the father of a little black There's a nick in the moon. Every n had a lady but me. And it goes on and on and on. Songs made using stereotypes not just about black people, but about Asian people, about Native American people.
But this isn't really just about ragtime rev. It's about what he represents, the new cohort of racists. Racism 2.0, if you will, that insists, that pleads that, you know, we're not actually racist. We're just preserving history, protecting the arts from the woke left.
They didn't shut me down because I sung songs with the gamer word. They shut me down because the songs were uniting people, not dividing them. The comment section showed all races loved it. It revealed a forgotten history that has been taken from us. They can't let us remember. In their minds, these people are always the victims. They're fighting against some unknown, unshaped leftist force that is just sucking the racism out of every corner of our society. Oh, did I say racism? I meant history preservation out of every corner of our society. And it's just crazy for him to say that songs like this were uniting people of all races when it's very clear to me which race or which group of people is supposed to be the butt of the joke in these videos. And the saddest thing, I think, is that people believed him. Some people actually think that he's somehow the savior of history. They think he's some sort of internet archival or important source for ragtime songs when it's like, yeah, half of these songs you can literally just look them up online and it's not some lost artifact. It's just the fact that I don't know, maybe people don't want to hear a song that calls them a five times. When I go even further into his content into the type of stuff that he's been posting online, it literally just seems to me like he's just actually delusional. Here is him complaining about his channel being banned, which, you know, we'll get more into that timeline. My YouTube channel had 80K subscribers when they nuked it. It was rocketing towards 100K. I've proven that there is a huge market for what I do and that the audience is there. They will shut me down to never let me achieve my potential. But I proved my point deliciously. Why did they take down your historical archives? Because they're aggressively erasing our history. They are violent, petty, insane, communist, and they cannot let humanity win.
Because yeah, the people calling you out and acknowledging the history of the n-word that you're oh so happy to use in almost every video, they're actually the ones erasing history. You who seem to be pushing this idea that black people really loved being under the boot of Jim Crow oppression, really loved being the butt of every joke, really loved being portrayed as lazy, as stupid. Like, are you kidding me? He's actually just lost his mind. So, you know, let's just take a look at one of his more popular videos and just take a gander at how informative this type of content actually is.
Does anyone else feel more educated after watching that video? I certainly do. I just learned how racist and horrible a person can be online. And I think ragtime rev is so implatic of a fundamental problem that I think exists on social media. The fact that algorithms don't really care when people post openly racist content. I mean, perfect example of when I think about this phenomenon is Kevin Leonardo, the king of online ragebait, who built a career off of literally showing his butthole on YouTube through a kind of educational loophole, which allowed him to post this video claiming that he was teaching people how to shave their butt.
Um, and after that stunt, he quickly moved to literal racism. So, it's just like when you're a rage baiting person online, it just seems like one thing leads to another, but there always is some racist element in their content.
Unfortunately, the sad truth is that the algorithm doesn't really distinguish between racist and non-racist content anymore. It just seems to see things like interaction rates, comments, even if they're negative, and it just runs with that. Like, honestly, I feel like most people who engage with this type of stuff on the internet are not racist. In fact, I think when this content goes viral, you'll literally see people in the comments who are disgusted by what they're seeing, who call it out. And yet, the algorithm truly doesn't care.
It truly just sees those interaction numbers and engagement and runs with it, seeing it as something that will make people stay on the platform longer because they're so mad. And what really gets me is how these people play the system. The only reason that ragtime rev is allowed to exist online for so long is that he was claiming that he was informative, that he was preserving history. But literally anyone with eyes and ears can see that this is just a way for him to be racist openly online.
Here's him literally celebrating how much success his video was seeing. 400K in 4 days is insane. Putting it on Spotify and even mocking people who are just saying how awful this is. This ain't funny or a joking matter, guys. I don't give a f. It's a parody. He said a racial slur. Very valid. You're not funny. You aren't a lyrical genius. I don't care if you say we're getting too woke. We're getting our rights taken during this Asian time. And there's no joking about racial injustice. This also all ties into the fact that a lot of y'all see everything as a joke now. Like everything has to be funny. There always has to be a gag. And you know, listen, me included, the world can be very depressing. And I absolutely understand the fact that, you know, we need a little funny. We need a little haha in there. But when we're actually making these things into jokes, when we're actually taking the suffering of generations of black people who have constantly been abused by this word and just taking that and putting that on a song on YouTube and these platforms are allowing that, that's what's really getting me. These platforms should not be allowing people like him on the internet. Like this should literally be like, "Okay, you use the nword in your title and your thumbnail. Like, you're done." It should be banned instantly banned. It's insidious. And I'm sick of people making excuses for content like this. And if you don't believe me when I'm saying that this man is literally just a racist, he literally refuses to acknowledge the contributions that black artists have made to music in general, including ragtime, the genre he loves to use to basically make fun of them.
Here's him literally yelling at Grock AI, which rightfully emphasize the contribution of black artists in genres like ragtime. Try to repeatedly gaslight me that blacks love when you use that word. That really just makes us feel really humanized. We're the sole inventors of early American music like ragtime. When I called it out with actual evidence, it stopped responding.
We've been sold a complete farcical lie about our history and AI is programmed to reinforce it. Literally see articles like this Wikipedia article, ragtime music was developed long before it was printed as sheet music. While its precise origins are uncertain, scholars like Terry Waldo believe it to stem from music played by plantation slaves or dance events called rags. The musician and symbol would generally consist of a banjo player and a fiddle player. And I mean, you see people like Scott Joplin who's deemed the king of ragtime, a black man. It's just so telling to me when someone is just so mad over the fact that a black musician, a black person could possibly have contributed to culture in some way. And it's like, yeah, despite the fact that we've literally been oppressed for hundreds and hundreds of years and literally been denied the opportunities that others have been given, we've still made a dent in our culture. We've still had massive contributions to this country. and the fact that you're not even willing to accept that. But also, maybe just don't take him that seriously either because he seems to have no argument and will just say whatever to defend his obviously racist and disgusting behavior. I mean, a few tweets ago, while he was telling people that black people were stupid and that they couldn't have contributed to ragtime music, here he is basically trying to say that black people love ragtime music and they actually made so much money off of making these racist ballads. And, you know, I want to emphasize that ragtime music isn't inherently racist in itself.
It's just unfortunate that a lot of people took something made by those who were enslaved probably as a way to lift their spirits and took it back at them and said, "Ha, you're stupid." Like, that's so mean. That's evil. Did blackface as much as whites and developed lucrative careers out of it and were much beloved in their time.
Blacks also did white face and even yellowface and Jewace. You've been sold a lie about this era and you've become the very racist you despise. don't want to leave context out, but this is someone literally saying that, hey, white face isn't the same as blackface because it doesn't have that long and storied history. And him trying to turn the tables on a person and call them racist is insane. Also, just to say this might be true, you know, black people might have gotten their start by doing blackface. And I think it's so unfortunate and so demeaning and so dehumanizing that they had to do this because I hate to tell it to y'all, but blackface was the thing. It was very popular. It was ingrained in so much of our culture. So yeah, black people had to do blackface. Does that mean that every black person liked it? No. Does that mean that the practice still wasn't insanely racist and rooted in stereotypes meant to degrade black people? No. Like his argument makes no logical sense. Now, TLDDR on him, cuz I feel like I've talked about this freak way too long. If he actually cared about the history that he constantly claims to protect, he wouldn't continually discredit the documented contributions of black artists to the genre that he uses to mock them and his channel would look less like a formula for rage bait and more like a history channel. I think it's so disgusting that YouTube allowed this type of content on its platform at all. Because by the way, this man was allowed to get 400,000 views on a video.
Literally title nword, thumbnail nword, video content, him saying the nword.
When I tell you that during my time on YouTube, I literally had videos be like demonetized, limited, ad restrictions, because I'm talking about sexual assault. I'm talking about serious topics, and this man is just allowed to use the n-word willy-nilly. It literally took weeks for this man to face any consequences on the platform at all while he still continued to build, package, and propagate racism into a cute, quirky format. Now, while we're here, I did want to talk to you about how harmful the usage of the word is.
Yeah, that word is. and why people are still angry about racism. Because I feel like a lot of people when I tell them this, it goes in one ear and out the other. As the Jim Crow Museum states, quote, well, I'm paraphrasing here, the nword carries with it much of the hatred and repulsion directed towards Africans and African-Americans. Historically, the n-word defined, limited, and mocked African-Americans. It was a term of exclusion, a verbal justification for discrimination. Whether used as a noun, verb, or adjective, it reinforced the stereotype of the lazy, stupid, worthless parasite. No American ethnofism carried so much purposeful venom. As the following representative list suggests, and it lists a number of words that are linked to the n-word, and it just shows how venomous this word truly was, and what it actually meant.
Here's it used as a verb to wear out, spoil, or destroy. Acting inwardish, acting in an indolent and irresponsible manner. Inward lover, derogatory term aimed at whites, lacking in the necessary loathing of blacks. I think this one is also interesting. Inward stick, a police officer's baton. And just to speak more personally about how hearing the word makes me feel. It literally makes me feel like [ __ ] It makes me feel powerless, like angry.
There's literally nothing that I could say to a person who calls me that that would make them feel how I do when they use that word against me. Woo! Okay, that is a rough transition, but I'm kind of tired of talking about Ragtime Rev. Let's talk about somebody else who's been on my nerves online. Racial gaslighting.
>> If black people are still oppressed by slavery that happened over 200 years ago, then I have PTSD because my grandfather was a war veteran. You see, THAT MAKES NO [ __ ] SENSE.
>> THANKS, racially ambiguous white boy for telling me that I really shouldn't care about slavery as a black person and that, you know, we should just all get over it. Meet Gio, a Tik Tok yapper, a group known for their very brain deadad takes about social issues. And you know, I guess I have to refute this Tik Tok, right? Because, you know, maybe in a perfect world he'd be right, but obviously he isn't. As Jim Crow black economic progress after slavery states, this is a literal study. First, we document that black families enslaved until the Civil War continue to have considerably lower education, income, and wealth today. Second, we show that this persistence is mostly driven by postslavery oppression under Jim Crow.
We discussed black Americans limited access to education as a critical mechanism. It wasn't just slavery. It was what came after. It was Jim Crow laws that literally were not overturned until what about 50 years ago. And even if you're like, "Oh, well that was so long ago." Well, look at what's happening today. Continued restrictions to the voting rights of African-Americans, cutting up their districts, pushing them away, going to the Supreme Court and saying, "Hey, I don't want to give these black people any representation."
And the poverty that came from slavery didn't just go away immediately. It is so incredibly hard in the system that we live in today to actually economically advance. Meaning that you have less access to education, less job opportunities, and are more likely to stay stagnant. It's not just a matter of flicking a switch when slavery somehow ended. That would make everything nice and dandy. It didn't just happen like that. Actually, a lot of people ended up going into another exploitative and predatory practice, sharecropping, where they were forced to work the land, get very little for their money and and continue to be exploited by land owners that had enslaved them just years prior.
But honestly, I think that's what these yappers do best. They rage bait. They simplify very important and serious issues just to gain the very temporary benefit of Tik Tok clout. And I honestly can't believe that Gio believes any of the crap that he's spitting. But sadly, the truth may be that he's legitimately racist because this next video is just wild. Did you know that according to recent statistics, pitbulls make up 6% of the dog population, but commit 66% of the fatal and severe attacks on humans?
So, if you're in the neighborhood and you're walking around and you intentionally avoid a group of pit bulls, it's not because you hate dogs, but it's because you're not taking your chances. You have pattern recognition.
And while this is a true statistic, I'm not talking about dogs. Did you know that this is actually insane? He's basically trying to legitimize people being scared or afraid of black people.
I'm sorry if you see me walking down the street. I I I don't think you should be walking away from me because of these faulty statistics, which by the way, let's just dig into these statistics because they're a product of overpolicing. They're a product of what we talked about earlier, the continued economic oppression that black Americans have faced following the end of slavery, the end of Jim Crow, and to this day.
And honestly, anytime I hear these statistics being used, I just think of, you know, doesn't this seem very logical if you have a meta analysis of what happened of the situation, right? When you systemically deny a given group of people education, jobs, opportunity for advancement, yeah, you get poverty. And unfortunately, a lot of people who are suffering under conditions that were made to entrap and deny their ability to economically advance, they're going to turn to crime. But even in that case, right, these statistics are a lie. As nonprofit quarterly states, quote, "Statistics linking black people in crime have historically overstated the problem of crime in black communities and produced a skewed depiction of American crime as a whole." For instance, in trying to understand where and when certain crimes occur, researchers from the National Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration of Justice spoke only with law enforcement agencies and officers stationed in low-income black communities. This skewed the data which intentionally ignored the disproportionate police presence in these neighborhoods as well as delinquency among among middleclass white young men yet was used to craft strategies for the war on crime such as increased patrol and surveillance in low-income communities of color. It's kind of an oh duh like moment because yeah due to the overpolicing of black neighborhoods more crime will be reported there. It's a self-fulfilling prophecy. And you know, he even tried to make a response to this which got a lot less attention for him. And you know, I just wanted to watch it and give it my own.
>> I love how when you bring up the statistic that blacks are incarcerated more than any other race, at least disproportionately, they like to say that, "Oh, that's just cuz cops are racist, man. They be overpacing our neighborhoods." How do you want me to react to that? Oh, no. Cops are overpolicing neighborhoods where more crime is committed. Like, what do you want me to say?
>> He's intentionally not trying to get the point. It's like, yeah, people are bringing up the valid point that, yeah, these neighborhoods are overpoliced, that a lot of these neighborhoods are overpoliced because of racism, because there's this perception of black people being more criminal somehow. And it's like, I I don't even know if there's a reasonable way to argue with people like this, to actually engage in some form of legitimate discourse. I just think people like this might even just be a lost cause because what is he even talking about here? He's yapping to me about blacks from his nice suburban home, talking about how we should just get over racism. question mark. I'm I just I'm so tired of this group of Tik Tok yappers who are just using this as an excuse to be racist. And you know what even gets worse? He continues to tell us to get over slavery. Recently, I made a video talking about how blacks can be racist, too. How just because you were discriminated in the past does not justify racism in the present. In this case being that a lot of black people are hating white people because they're white. But according to my comment section, black people can't be racist because white people enslaved them in the past. And so now I'm about to demonstrate why that's a stupid argument with like I literally I can't I can't with apples. With apples we're going to see he's going to solve racism with a demonstration of apples on the table.
Apples. So it's a random red apple.
Random green apple. And one day they cross paths. But the red apple does not like the green apple. Why? We don't know. But he's green. So the red apple just beats the [ __ ] GREEN APPLE. OH, he hates green. Anyways, one day the green apple has a son. Meet green apple son. And a red apple comes walking up to him and the red apple's like, "Hey, you seem pretty cool. Me and you should be best friends." And the green apple says, "Fuck no. I don't associate myself with red apples because a red apple beat up my dad one time." Do you see how stupid that sounds? That literally makes no sense. And you want to know what the red apple said? HE SAID, "MAN, [ __ ] YOU." I mean, like, I even feel bad like watching this content for this video because I'm just like I feel like there is literally no way I'm getting to him. I literally just feel like he's just doing this to rage bait people and like he doesn't actually have a coherent argument or ideology and I feel like that is a lot of what's spreading racism nowadays. Like people just have no idea. They just hate black people. They just automatically hate us.
And one of the things that I if you guys saw the crash documentary on Netflix recently text messages came out from um one of the victims of the crash Dom where he was just basically texting his girlfriend Mackenzie like oh these blacks need to be shot or something.
They're so stupid. I'm just like you guys just text about black people randomly. Like why are we so heavy in your mind? Why are we so heavy in your noggin? And I think that just goes back to what we were talking about earlier.
The same stuff that Ragtime Rev is trying to preserve. It's the fact that this racism is so ingrained in a lot of y'all's brains that you cannot like you cannot look past it. You cannot detach from it. That's what I mean by like people are like, "Oh, racism is over.
Oh, you know, people should just get over what happened during slavery." I'm like, "No, because this is still happening today. Y'all are just doing it in a different font and just pretending that because I'm not the one who, you know, necessarily started slavery, I shouldn't feel any type of way about it.
I should just go on. You should move on with your life as And it's like, no, we're still facing material economic effects from it. It's wild because like the man who just a few videos ago was trying to justify racism is now going to tell black people that you're actually the racist one for holding negative beliefs about white people despite the massive atrocities they've committed against your people. And you know, I'm not advocating for racism against white people, but I don't think it would be necessarily weird for black people to kind of have a hesitancy around white people given what's been happening in the past and what continues to happen.
The same systems that existed back then didn't just go away. They morphed into new things. They morphed into more subtle ways to deny black people opportunities. Now, just to wrap this section up, I did just want to say I feel like in a perfect world, content like this would not be trending, would not be pushed at all. And it's crystal clear to me that Gio doesn't actually care about anything that he's saying, doesn't actually have any idea about what he's talking about, and is instead just doubling down on content that worked for him in the past. And sadly, this just seems to be the natural result of again an algorithm that pushes substance to the side in favor of reactions, in favor of engagement. Also, for me, this content just really hits so hard because it's so indicative of what I hear when I try to speak up against the ills of slavery, against the long-term effects of things like Jim Crow laws. Even thinking about things like the fact that black people have been dispossessed so many times, it's like even under harsh Jim Crow laws, we built our own communities. We built our own stories. And you know what happened time and time again? our [ __ ] was destroyed and y'all are like, "Oh, just get over racism." Sure, Jan. I'd love to, the culture shift. And I just wanted to dedicate this last section, the last few minutes of this video, to get out some thoughts, especially around what I'll call a culture shift. And, you know, just lastly, some thoughts I have about AI because I know I mentioned AI and Black Fatigue and all that. So, let's just wrap it up and tie it up with a tight little bow because I'm tired of talking about it lowkey. Um, case in point being this Kevin Hart roast which was just so insane.
>> He got into a fist fight on a private plane. Proof that no matter how much money black people have, they're still just going to act like ninjas.
You've done good though, Kevin. The black community is so proud of you.
Right now, George Floyd is looking up us at us all laughing so hard that he can't breathe. And it's not just this clip.
It's multiple clips. It's people joking about Kevin Hart being lynched. And this is wild. You know, how is it helping to roast Kevin Hart by bringing in a dead man who was literally murdered into your joke? And you know, saying that George Floyd went to hell for being murdered by a police officer is insane. They literally just murdered this man in cold blood and y'all are sitting here trying to justify it in any way you can. Like, that's what's getting to that's what's getting to me. They just can't understand that racism exists. They have to find something else to try to gag him with. And it's like, what? And to make this all worse, Kevin Hart decided to defend some of these jokes and say that he didn't really care. And why should I have to care, you know?
>> Yeah, the George Floyd joke, it wasn't a tasteful joke to our culture, to our audience, but our audience that's watching the roast. If you're watching the roast, you get why they're doing it.
You get why the racial humor is is is on the table. Do do you feel like Tony Hinchcliffe went too far when he made that joke about George Floyd?
>> It's Tony Hinchcliffe.
>> Yeah.
>> Like I don't like I don't expect less. I don't expect more.
>> I feel I feel like you're saying going too far is the point. I don't want to put words in your >> Yes. I mean you that's why you're there.
>> My thing is like I did feel a slight sympathy for Kevin here, but it went away instantly when he just for some reason he it's not clicking to him that he does have a responsibility as a public figure, as someone with the platform to speak out about things like this. Like this is stuff that's literally impacting your own people, bro. Like police brutality is literally a thing regardless of whether or not you're a rich and famous black person or not. But I honestly think that this racism 2.0, this racism nuvo, if you will, is a result of this free speech craze that resulted after the whole cancel culture era. And you know, I do feel like the cancel culture era and some sometimes what I see when it comes to cancel culture does go a little bit too far. Like for example, right, the funky frog bait situation. Listen, I don't know why I'm just like tiptoeing into every little drama on the internet, but the funky frog bait situation. As a black person, was I kind of like after I saw those tweets from I forgot the person's name, but Goose something. When I saw those tweets, I was like, "Yeah, I don't really like that." Now, I think Funky was getting to a point with some of what they were saying. Like, they were like, "Yeah, a lot of you guys are just canceling people for no reason. and you weren't really doing any research.
And I think that that is one of the ills of kind of the cursoral cancellation state that people just go off of vibes and they're like, "This person is an evil person because xyz and blah blah blah. You are a horrible." It's like chill. And it's also like I feel like in the carceral cancel culture state, people focus on the most stupid things.
Like yes, was funky frog bait wrong to say that? Yeah. Do I think that as a white queer funky frog bait is evil and perpetuating racism to maybe a very minor extent? Like I I think they legitimately just didn't [ __ ] know what they're like. Have y'all ever talked about something you don't know what you're talking about? Like have you ever had a a verbal slip up? I think that's more so what happened. I think we have bigger fish to fry. We literally have a man in office who is trying to remove placards that acknowledge the ills of slavery around our country. like we have bigger fish to fry and a lot of y'all focus on the very minutia on the internet, the very minute details of someone. And unfortunately now we've moved to this place where cancel culture doesn't even work. Like legitimately, if Funky Frog Bait was like didn't release an apology and was like, "Oh, I hate you liberals. Like you guys are so annoying." They would probably be able to find a new audience of more conservative brain people. Like I think of like people like Russell Brand who literally have, you know, sexual assault, rape allegations against them that are, in my opinion, very credible and they're just allowed to subsist on the internet because they tap into this red pill audience and it's so disgusting and it's because like these platforms are just allowing anything cuz they're scared. They're scared of government push back because of the Trump administration. Like when people are literally saying that, you know, CO was fake. when people were literally saying that, you know, the voting machines were rigged and that there was this fraud in the election, they were banned at first and then, you know, Trump gets back into office and it's like, oh no, we we can't ban people like that. You know, these companies are trying to censor us. And it's like, I lowkey think that sometimes maybe they should be able to. Y'all shouldn't be able to spout the n-word on these platforms willy-nilly. But yeah, that's pretty much all I had to say about this. Thank you all so much for watching. Um, bit of a heavier topic today. Thank you so much for staying with me. Thank you so much for watching.
Bye everybody. Hope you have a great day, great night, whatever. And I hope this video was at least a little bit informative. I'll see you all next time.
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